#Maryam Mirzakhani, a genius in mathematics and the first woman to win the Fields Medal in math, died today, July 15, 2017, in a hospital in the #United States.
She had been battling with cancer for four years, the news of which spread only three days ago.
The Women’s Committee of the National Council of Resistance of #Iran
extends its condolences on the tragic demise of this great woman and
genius mathematician to her family, to the women and people of Iran, the
scientific community and the women of the world.
Maryam Mirzakhani was born in 1977 in Tehran, Iran. She went to Farzanegan (Exceptional Talents) high school in #Tehran.
In
1994, she won a gold medal in the International Mathematical Olympiad,
the first female Iranian student to do so. In the 1995 International
Mathematical Olympiad, she became the first Iranian student to achieve a
perfect score and to win two gold medals.
She
obtained her BS in mathematics (1999) from Sharif University of
Technology in Tehran. Then she went to the United States for graduate
work, earning a PhD from Harvard University (2004), where she worked
under the supervision of the Fields Medalist Curtis McMullen.
At
Harvard University, she tackled a problem that had stymied many a
mathematician: calculating the volumes of moduli spaces of
curves-geometric objects whose points each represent a different
hyperbolic surface.
The Popular Science journal picked Maryam Mirzakhani among the annual Brilliant Ten in 2005.
She was also a 2004 research fellow of the Clay Mathematics Institute and a professor at Princeton University.
Mirzakhani
has made several contributions to the theory of moduli spaces of
Riemann surfaces. Her subsequent work focused on Teichmüller dynamics
of moduli space. In particular, she was able to prove the long-standing
conjecture that William Thurston's earthquake flow on Teichmüller space
is ergodic.
Mirzakhani
was awarded the Fields Medal in 2014 for "her outstanding contributions
to the dynamics and geometry of Riemann surfaces and their moduli
spaces". The award was made in Seoul at the International Congress of
Mathematicians on 13 August.
She
was married to Jan Vondrák, a Czech theoretical computer scientist and
applied mathematician who is an associate professor at Stanford
University. Her daughter, Anahita, is six years old.
No comments:
Post a Comment